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E-raamat: Environmental Change, Forced Displacement and International Law: from legal protection gaps to protection solutions

  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Law and Migration
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-Dec-2018
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351361804
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Law and Migration
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-Dec-2018
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351361804

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This book explores the increasing concern over the extent to which those suffering from forced cross-border displacement as a result of environmental change are protected under international human rights law. Formally they are not entitled to admission or stay in a third state country, a situation that has been identified as an international "legal protection gap".

The book seeks to provide answers to two basic questions: whether and to what extent existing international law protects cross-border environmental displacement, and whether and how existing formalized regional complementary protection standards can interpretively solidify and conceptualize protection for cross-border environmental displacement. The discussion outlines that the protection of the human person is not only an ex post facto obligation of states, but must be increasingly seen as an ex ante one. The analysis further suggests that the European Union regionally orientated protection regime can help states to consolidate an evolving protection paradigm of proactive and reactive measures being erected at the international level. It can also narrow the identified legal protection gaps. In so doing, it helps states to reconceptualise protection as a holistic and dynamic enterprise.

This book will be of great interest to academics in law, political science and human rights, policy makers and civil society organisations both at national and international level.
Table of cases and other materials
ix
Table of international and regional treaties and other instruments
xiii
List of frequently used abbreviations
xviii
Preface xxi
Acknowledgements xxii
1 Introduction
1(14)
1.1 Basic premises of this book
4(1)
1.2 Guiding threads, concepts, and caveats
5(2)
1.3 The academic and societal, contribution of this book
7(1)
1.4 The contribution of this book to existing literature
8(3)
1.5 Research scope and limitations
11(2)
1.6 Book outline
13(2)
2 From environmental change to human displacement
15(30)
2.1 People on the move
16(5)
2.2 The vulnerability token of environmental change
21(10)
2.3 Environmental displacement as a human rights issue
31(5)
2.4 A holistic approach to protection: Prc-in-post displacement phases
36(4)
2.5 Environmentally displaced persons: The objective trump
40(3)
2.6 The environmental displacement protection paradox
43(1)
2.7 Conclusion
43(2)
3 Protection obligations of states under international human rights law and related instruments
45(71)
3.1 Determining home state obligations: A survey of illustrative examples
45(20)
3.2 Antilogy of protection obligations for EDPs: The underlying duty to prevent human rights violations
65(10)
3.3 Explicit recognition of the duty of states to protect from displacement
75(15)
3.4 Implicit recognition of the duty of states to protect from displacement
90(23)
3.5 Conclusion
113(3)
4 Status and protection obligations of states under international refugee law
116(36)
4.1 Determining host states' obligations
116(19)
4.2 Realities and limits of states' obligations under the international protection system
135(4)
4.3 Enhancing the protection of persons at the regional level
139(7)
4.4 The principle of non-refoulement: A common ground of protection
146(4)
4.5 Conclusion
150(2)
5 Consolidating protection for environmental displacement
152(72)
5.1 Europe's normative power for protecting EDPs
152(4)
5.2 Consolidating a proactive approach to protection for EDPs
156(23)
5.3 Consolidating a reactive approach to protection for EDPs
179(41)
5.4 (Re) Conceptualising protection of EDPs: Protection as a dynamic guiding concept
220(3)
5.5 Conclusion
223(1)
6 Conclusion
224(8)
6.1 The increasing legal recognition of en vironmentally displaced persons
224(1)
6.2 Protection obligations from cross-border environmental displacement arise from legal cumulative effects
225(2)
6.3 Protection obligations after cross-border environmental displacement arise contextually
227(2)
6.4 Towards a new human rights-based protection paradigm for environmental displacement
229(3)
Bibliography 232(20)
Index 252
Isabel M. Borges is an Adjunct Associate Professor at BI, Department of Law and Governance, the Norwegian Business School and Guest Researcher at the Faculty of Law, Department of Public and International Law, University of Oslo, Norway.